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10 Interesting Facts About Elvis Presley

10 Interesting Facts About Elvis Presley

10 Interesting Facts About Elvis Presley

1- Elvis and Johnny Cash

johnny_cash_elvis_presleyElvis was really good friends with Johnny Cash, and the two used to impersonate each other

I remember Elvis’ show at the Eagle’s Nest as if were yesterday. The date was a blunder, because the place was an adult club where teenagers weren’t welcome, and so Vivian and I were two of only a dozen or so patrons, fifteen at the most. All the same, I thought Elvis was great. He sang That’s All Right, Mama and Blue Moon of Kentucky once again (and again) plus some black blues songs and a few numbers like Long Tall Sally, and he didn’t say much. He didn’t have to, of course; his charisma alone kept everyone’s attention. The thing I really noticed that night, though, was his guitar playing. Elvis was a fabulous rhythm player. He’d start into That’s All Right, Mama with his own guitar alone, and you didn’t want to hear anything else. I didn’t anyway. I was disappointed when Scotty Mooreand Bill Black jumped in and covered him up. Not that Scotty and Bill weren’t perfect for him – the way he sounded with them that night was what I think of as seminal Presley, the sound I missed through all the years after he became so popular and made records full of orchestration and overproduction. I loved that clean, simple combination of Scotty, Bill, and Elvis with his acoustic guitar. You know, I’ve never heard or read anyone else praising Elvis as a rhythm guitar player, and after the Sun days I never heard his own guitar on his records.

 

2- Elvis Presley really wanted

for his birthday was a rifle or a bicycle

elvis-first-guitarIn competing versions of the story, what Elvis Presley really wanted for his birthday was a rifle or a bicycle—both fairly typical choices for a boy his age growing up on the outskirts of Tupelo, Mississippi.

Elvis’ parents cannot afford a bicycle that Elvis wants, so Gladys talks him into accepting a guitar instead. Elvis’ first guitar costs $12.95 and is purchased at the Tupelo Hardware Company.

upelo Hardware looks much the same as it did in 1946, when 11-year-old Elvis Presley came in with his mom. Gladys Presley wanted to buy her son a birthday-present bicycle. Elvis wanted her to buy him a rifle. The well-stocked store sold both, but since neither party was happy with the other’s idea of a gift, a compromise was reached.

Mom bought Elvis a guitar.

The store still has the same wood floors and oak-stained, glass-fronted counters, which now are just as likely to be stocked with Elvis sweatshirts and collectibles as drain cleaner and wrench sets. The store no longer sells bicycles (or guns), but in honor of its most famous customer it still sells guitars.

 

3-Having Fun With Elvis On Stage

Elvis released an entire album of between-song stage banter called “Having Fun With Elvis On Stage” just to fulfill a contractual obligation in ’74…So it’s an album of Elvis talking. In between songs

Having Fun with Elvis on Stage has been considered to be Presley’s worst album; critics felt that the compilation of banter was incoherent, and lacked context due to the removal of the songs that his remarks related to. In their 1991 book, Jimmy Guterman and Owen O’Donnell named Having Fun with Elvis on Stage the worst rock and rollalbum of all time, duly noting its lack of actual “rock and roll”.

Presley himself disapproved of the album, and it was withdrawn at his request. Despite this, Having Fun with Elvis on Stage reached number 130 on the Billboard 200, peaked at number 9 on the Billboard Hot Country LPs, and spawned bootleg copies along with a fan-made sequel.

 

 

4- Elvis Presley’s first TV appearance

Elvis Presley first appeared on national television in the USA on January 28, 1956, on The Dorsey Brothers Stage Show in New York. On Monday, January 23, 1956, Elvis, Scotty Moore, Bill Black and D.J. Fontana rehearsed in Memphis for their television debut. Elvis and Colonel Parker flew to New York on Wednesday the 25th. They stayed at the Warwick Hotel on 52nd Street. Elvis ate dinner in the Hickory House restaurant the night they arrived and did some sightseeing on the 26th. Perhaps as an indicator of things to come, Scotty, Bill and D.J. were not afforded a plane trip and drove from Memphis to New York and arrived on January 27th.

Jackie Gleason said, “The kid has no right behaving like a sex maniac on a national show.”

 

5-Elvis Presley and the sandwich

Elvis Presley and the sandwichThe peanut butter and banana sandwich has been referred to as a favorite of Elvis Presley, who was renowned for his food cravings such as the Fool’s Gold Loaf, a loaf of Italian bread filled with a pound of bacon, peanut butter, and grape jelly. Books on Elvis Presley’s favorite foods and culinary tastes, as well as other published reports on his taste for peanut butter and banana sandwiches with or without bacon, have made the sandwich widely associated with Presley. It is often referred to using his name.

Presley’s fondness for peanut butter and banana sandwiches is well established; however, bacon is not mentioned in all accounts.A book about Presley and his mother, Gladys Presley, though, says he had “sandwich after sandwich of his favorite—peanut butter, sliced bananas, and crisp bacon”. Another passage describes him talking “feverishly until dawn” while “wolfing” down the sandwiches (described in this instance as being made with mashed banana)

 

6 On the evening of 27 August 1965, Elvis Presley and The Beatles, the music world’s biggest stars, met for the first and only time.

elvis_presley_beatles“We met Elvis Presley at the end of our stay in LA. We’d tried for years to, but we could never get to him. We used to think we were a bit of a threat to him and Colonel Tom Parker, which ultimately we were. So although we tried many times, Colonel Tom would just show up with a few souvenirs and that would have to do us for a while. We didn’t feel brushed off; we felt we deserved to be brushed off. After all, he was Elvis, and who were we to dare to want to meet him? But we finally received an invitation to go round and see him when he was making a film in Hollywood.” Paul McCartney It took place at Presley’s mansion at 565 Perugia Way, Bel Air, Los Angeles. The Beatles arrived at 11pm and were greeted by Elvis in his large circular living room. The room was bathed in red and blue light, and contained a colour television, jukebox, crescent-shaped couch, games tables and a bar. The meeting had been arranged by Presley’s manager ‘Colonel’ Tom Parker, and was highly anticipated by The Beatles and Brian Epstein. As they arrived Presley took The Beatles into the enormous living room; Epstein and Parker stood aside to watch the meeting. The encounter was not a great success, with a somewhat stilted atmosphere and little conversation at first. Eventually Elvis told them, “If you damn guys are gonna sit here and stare at me all night I’m gonna go to bed.” As the two teams faced one another, there was a weird silence and it was John who spoke first, rather awkwardly blurting out a stream of questions at Elvis, saying: ‘Why do you do all these soft-centred ballads for the cinema these days? What happened to good old rock ‘n’ roll?’ Elvis was fairly quiet – that was my first reaction. He smiled a lot and shook hands with everybody. The ice didn’t really break in the early stages at all. The boys and Elvis swapped tour stories, but it hadn’t got going. Tony Barrow With the ice broken, Presley called for guitars to be brought out and a brief jam session took place. Among the songs performed was You’re My World, a ballad which Cilla Black had recorded in 1964.

 

 

7-  -Elvis and Karate

Elvis wasn’t only The King Of Rock And Roll…he was also a black belt in karate! If you were lucky enough to see him in concert, you might wind up getting a free demonstration.

 

8 -Elvis wore a cross

Elvis wore a cross, the Hebrew letter chai, and a star of David around his neck. “I don’t want to miss out on heaven due to a technicality,” he said.

Elvis wore a cross, the Hebrew letter chai, and a star of David around his neck. “I don’t want to miss out on heaven due to a technicality,” he said

9 Songfellows

In 1954, just two years before his big break, Elvis auditioned for an amateur gospel quartet called the Songfellows… And they turned him down. (So, never give up!)

In August of 1950, the Blackwood Brothers, perhaps the most popular radio quartet in the nation, moved their operations from Shenandoah, Iowa to an office on Jefferson Avenue in Memphis. Native Mississippians, they were ready to come home. They began twice daily programs on WMPS, continued to develop their own record label, and started a series of concerts at Ellis Auditorium.
In June 1954 the Blackwoods got to take their music to national TV audience when they appeared on the hit CBS show ‘Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts’. Memphis Mayor Frank Tobey issued a proclamation designating the date asBlackwood Brothers Quartet Day for the ‘great credit’ the group brought to the city. Ironically, two weeks later two members of the quartet were killed in a plane crash. Their funeral was attended by 5.000 fans. A newspaper announced that ‘the galleries were reserved for Negroes’.
Three days after the funeral 19-year-old Elvis went into the Sun studios to make his first recordings. It is quite likely that he was one of those mourners who filed past the caskets of R.W. Blackwood and Bill Lyles, as he had been a fan of their music since he was fourteen. It was shortly after the Blackwood plane crash that Elvis actually had a chance to join a gospel quartet – not the Blackwood Brothers, as has been widely reported, but one that was an off-shoot of the Blackwoods. It was called the Songfellows and was formed by Jim Hamill and Cecil Blackwood, a nephew of James Blackwood. Elvis knew both and asked for an audition. After some awkwardness, the group turned him down. Elvis couldn’t hear harmony. As long as he was singing lead, he was fine, but when the baritone or the tenor took the lead, someone had to sing harmony, and he couldn’t harmonize. Elvis listened, continued to improve, and a few months later the Songfellows gave him a second shot when Cecil moved up to the regular Blackwood Brothers. But Elvis already signed a contract with Sun records. The Songfellows wanted the contract to be broken, but Elvis wouldn’t. Or couldn’t.
Later Elvis would sing an occasional solo with the Blackwoods backing him up.

 

 

10- Elvis Presley met President

When Elvis Presley met President Nixon in December of 1970, he read aloud a six-page letter to the President, in which he revealed his desire to be made a “Federal Agent-at-Large” in the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. Presley accused The Beatles of being ‘un-American’ for their open drug-taking and anti-Vietnam politics.
“I’m on your side, ” Elvis told Nixon. Then the singer asked if he could have a badge from the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. (Ollie Atkins / Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum)

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sources: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/12431#sthash.ngM4HQPt.dpuf

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peanut_butter,_banana_and_bacon_sandwich#Elvis_Presley_and_the_sandwich

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Having_Fun_with_Elvis_on_Stage

http://www.elvis.com.au/presley/elvis_presleys_national_tv_appearances_in_the_1950s.shtml

http://www.elvis.com.au/presley/johnny_cash_remembers_elvis_presley.shtml

http://www.elvispresleymusic.com.au/articles/blackwood-brothers.html

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